Durham tallied a total of nine runs (2, 3, 2, 2) across its next four games. The Bulls won two of those games.

Even with that, the Bulls appear to have plenty of offense without Myers in the lineup.

“Obviously, it’s not how it’s going to be every game,” outfielder Brandon Guyer said in reference to the 16-run output. “That’s not going to continue, but we have a lot of good players.”

First baseman Shelley Duncan cranked two home runs in his return from a three-game bereavement leave.

“Wil left, but I don’t think much is missing,” Duncan said.

Bulls manager Charlie Montoyo said Duncan could be one of the keys for his team as it tries to maintain one of the best records in the league.

“It would be nice if he could pick up the slack with Myers going up, that would be good,” Montoyo said.

The Bulls remain well-stocked, considering that the lineup of position players includes Duncan, catcher (and now occasional outfielder) Chris Gimenez, catcher Jesus Flores, second baseman Mike Fontenot, infielder Ryan Roberts and outfielders Jason Bourgeois and Guyer — all with big-league time. Roberts was sent to Durham to make room for Myers on the Tampa Bay Rays roster.

Add in infielder Vince Belnome, who with a .346 batting average is among the league leaders, and shortstop Tim Beckham, who had a recent 12-game hitting streak, and Montoyo said there’s no shortage of offense.

The bigger concern might be the evolving availability of pitchers because of recent needs of the parent Rays.

“We have a good team, the thing is about pitching,” Montoyo said.

-- WEBB A WINNER: Former Elon University pitcher Kyle Webb was credited with his first professional victory in his second appearance, working 2 2/3 shutout innings in relief Friday night for the State College Spikes in their 12-1 victory against the Auburn Doubledays in the Class A New York-Penn League. Webb was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals earlier this month.

Meanwhile, Elon’s all-time hits leader, catcher Alex Swim, went 1-for-5 in his professional debut Saturday for the Minnesota Twins affiliate in the Gulf Coast League against the Boston Red Sox farm club.

-- RODGERS GOES OUT: With a muscle strain and injured elbow ligament, Colin Rodgers’ season ended with the Lexington Legends. He began his pro career last year for the Burlington Royals.

Rodgers returned to Surprise, Ariz., for rehabilitation this month. He was there for about a day before this year’s Burlington team departed from the organization’s spring headquarters.

Rodgers, a left-hander whose last outing came May 28, went 3-3 with a 3.27 earned run average in nine starts with Lexington.

-- AROUND THE HORN …: Bubba Starling, a Burlington outfielder last year and one of Kansas City’s top prospects, went 5-for-5 last Sunday at Asheville, pushing his batting average above .200 for the Lexington Legends in the South Atlantic League. He has seven home runs and 31 runs batted in across his first 62 games. He struck out 74 times. … Former Burlington outfielder Brian Fletcher was named Player of the Week earlier this month for the Northwest Arkansas Naturals of the Class AA Texas League.